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ACTH-secreting pituitary adenomas (Cushing’s disease, CD) are the most frequent cause of Cushing’s syndrome. To test whether the size of ACTH-secreting adenomas correlates with the degree of biochemical and clinical features of hypercortisolism, we retrospectively reviewed all newly diagnosed CD patients seen at our institution by two neuro-endocrinologists over a 10-year time period. We documented...
Harvey Cushing’s monograph The Pituitary Body and Its Disorders describes Case XXXVIII, H. M. B., a 33 year-old man who presented with acromegaly in 1910. The detailed operative note reports an emergency tracheotomy performed following induction of anesthesia, and immediately prior to a naso-labial approach to a suspected sellar lesion. Cushing’s post-operative notes document a significant increase...
A review of Dr. Cushing’s surgical cases at Johns Hopkins Hospital revealed new information about his early operative experience with acromegaly. Although in 1912 Cushing published selective case studies regarding this work, a review of all his operations for acromegaly during his early years has never been reported. We uncovered 37 patients who Cushing treated with surgical intervention directed...
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